36 Fairy Tales and Tall Tales: Supplemental Guide 1B | The Fisherman and His Wife
Extensions 20 minutes
Note: Choose either the Story Map or Sequencing the Story activity.
You may wish to fill out a story map for “The Fisherman and His Wife”
together with the class. [Some students may be able to fill out this
chart individually.]
Sequencing the Story may also be done in partner pairs.
Story Map (Instructional Master 1B-1)
- Tell students that you will create a story map for “The Fisherman and
His Wife” together. Note: Tell students that you are going to write
down what they say, but that they are not expected to be able to
read what you write because they are still learning all the rules for
decoding. Emphasize that you are writing what they say so that you
don’t forget, and tell them that you will read the words to them. - Tell students that the people or animals in a story are called the
characters of the story. Ask students who the characters are in the
“The Fisherman and His Wife.” (fisherman, wife, flounder/fish) - Tell students that the setting of a story is where the story takes place.
Ask students what the settings are in this fable. (by the sea, hut,
cottage, castle) - Tell students that the plot of a story is what happens, or the events,
in the story. Ask students to tell you about the beginning, middle, and
end of the story.
[This is also a good opportunity to talk about the conventions of
beginning a fiction story, e.g., “Once there was.. ” and ending a fiction
story, e.g., “And there they are to this day.”]
Sequencing the Story (Instructional Master 1B-2)
- Give students a copy of Instructional Master 1B-2. Explain to students
that this worksheet has pictures of events from the plot of “The
Fisherman and His Wife.”- First, look at the pictures and talk about what is happening in each
picture.
- First, look at the pictures and talk about what is happening in each
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